In a poor 19th century rural Japanese village, everyone who reaches the age of 70 has to climb a nearby mountain to die. An elderly woman is reaching close to her cut-off age during her last... Read allIn a poor 19th century rural Japanese village, everyone who reaches the age of 70 has to climb a nearby mountain to die. An elderly woman is reaching close to her cut-off age during her last days with her family.In a poor 19th century rural Japanese village, everyone who reaches the age of 70 has to climb a nearby mountain to die. An elderly woman is reaching close to her cut-off age during her last days with her family.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 9 wins & 9 nominations total
- Arayashiki
- (as Kêshi Takamine)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Using widescreen and color film, director Kinoshita uniquely melds the cinematic with the theatrical, as the story is told in near kabuki fashion, with a singing narrator and traditional Japanese musical instrumentation. The sets are stylized and deliberately artificial, with realistic settings in the foreground, and miniature or painted backdrops behind them. There is also repeated use of monochromatic lighting, from red filters to green filters, to accentuate the mood of the scene.
The performances are equally stylized in the kabuki manner, and as such may be off-putting to Western audiences unused to the style. I thought the film was tremendous, an artistically challenging production with a very striking audio and visual presentation, and a moving, universal story touching on aging and obsolescence forming the bedrock. Recommended.
The villagers are intent to secure life for themselves and their family and will do anything necessary. In the middle of this all lives an old lady, almost 70 (the dying age) but healthy and strong. She does not want to burden the family, so she gives up her place in order for the young ones to live.
Imamura registers all this without judgment. This is a lesson to most people, filmmakers in particular. See, feel, but don't judge right away. See, feel, think, and then try to understand.
Did you know
- TriviaSumiko Sakamoto had her four front teeth extracted so she could better portray the scene where Orin smashes out her front teeth to convince her family that she is old enough to go.
- Quotes
Risuke: Hey Tsune! You guys tossed the dead baby in my paddy!
Tsune: Sure did. I figured that in Stinker's paddy, the stench would make it rot quicker... so I went out of my way to do you a favor. Be grateful.
Risuke: Who needs fertilizer like that? That was your brother, wasn't it?
Tsune: Wasn't my fault.
Risuke: You thought it'd be a girl, but you got a boy. Serves you right!
Tsune: You moron! You were almost thrown away yourself.
Risuke: You too. Same goes for all the yakkos in the village!
Tsune: Man you stink! If the next one's a boy, I'll go to your stinking paddy... and toss it there...
Risuke: I don't want... fertilizer like that...
- ConnectionsFeatured in Fandor: Cannes On Fandor: Two-Time Palme D'Or Winning Directors (2017)
- SoundtracksRisuke no uta
Written by Hitoshi Machida
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- La balada de Narayama
- Filming locations
- Maki Village, Otari, Nagano, Japan(village: 36°45'53"N, 137°55'39"E)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro